In a comprehensive report from our National Prison Project, the ACLU documents the terrible conditions and dangerous lack of planning at the Orleans Parish Prison during and after Hurricane Katrina. This report focuses on the experience of thousands of individuals trapped in the prison during and after the storm, and recounts the nightmare many of them later faced at various receiving facilities around Louisiana.

More concerning, though, was the revelation that New York doesn't seem to have any contingency plan for how it would evacuate Rikers if it *did* need to. Solitary Watch quoted a New York Times report that "no hypothetical evacuation plan for the roughly 12,000 inmates that the facility may house on a given day even exists."

"We are not evacuating Rikers Island," Mayor Michael Bloomberg said in a news conference this afternoon. Bloomberg annouced a host of extreme measures being taken by New York City in preparation for the arrival of Hurricane Irene, including a shutdown of the public transit system and the unprecedented mandatory evacuation of some 250,000 people from low-lying areas.

What if there were a stronger hurricane, or a terrorist attack, or some other emergency that did require evacuation of Rikers? Surely the city should have a set of plans in place. Plus, as @LilianaSegura pointed out, it's not just Rikers:

In response to the usual Internet riffraff making inhumane comments like "let them drown," there were two responses. First, those at Rikers are mainly pretrial detainees, low-level convicts, and juveniles (this is not a state prison, so it doesn't hold prisoners serving long, post-conviction sentences). @JessieNYC and some of her interlocutors explained how zero-tolerance school policies and the NYPD's stop-and-frisk policing strategy disproportionately funnel black and Latino youth into Rikers, as well as people who are poor. Here are some of those Tweets:

Second, as @LilianaSegura pointed out, even if everyone at Rikers *were* a convicted murderer the city still has a responsibility to take care of those in its custody. Indeed, constitutional and international law require prison and jail administrators to demonstrate a certain level of concern for prisoners' safety.